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+ The Next Generation with the Beauty + Justice Team

+ The Next Generation with the Beauty + Justice Team

Released Thursday, 11th May 2023
Good episode? Give it some love!
+ The Next Generation with the Beauty + Justice Team

+ The Next Generation with the Beauty + Justice Team

+ The Next Generation with the Beauty + Justice Team

+ The Next Generation with the Beauty + Justice Team

Thursday, 11th May 2023
Good episode? Give it some love!
Rate Episode

It’s a myth that science and research have to be impersonal and devoid of humanity—and in the final part of the Finale Episode, the Beauty + Justice team dispels the myth! Dr. Tamarra James-Todd, Marissa Chan, and Lissah Johnson share what beauty and beauty justice means to them, and how their positionality (life experiences and how we show up in the world) has inspired their beauty justice work. There’s also a special treat at the end—a message on what beauty means to the next generation. 

Marissa Chan is a PhD candidate in Population Health Sciences within the Department of Environmental Health at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. Her research interests and work experience surround environmental justice and beauty justice, specifically focusing on the intersection of place-based environmental hazards and product-based exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) in personal care products. Through her work, she aims to highlight the presence of EDCs in personal care products to a variety of stakeholders, support community voices and knowledge in environmental and beauty justice efforts, and work towards developing community-driven interventions and solutions. Prior to entering the doctoral program, she received an MS from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

You can follow Marissa and her work here: Twitter- @marissawchan, Linkedin, RESTYLE Study

Lissah Johnson is a PhD candidate in the Biological Sciences in Public Health program at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. Her research focuses on understanding how the mechanism to remove damaged or misfunctioning cells from the body becomes dysregulated in the formation and progression of ovarian cancer in order to uncover environmental drivers of gynecological cancers, and improve current prevention strategies and therapeutic options. Prior to starting graduate school, she received a B.S. in Chemistry from the University of Redlands and then worked as a research scientist in an environmental health laboratory at the California Department of Public Health for four years. Through her research, she hopes to bring awareness to the unique environmental and reproductive health threats that people from marginalized communities and identities encounter and support advocacy efforts pushing for regulatory change.

You can follow Lissah and her work here: Twitter- @LissahJohnson, LinkedIn, Sarosiek Lab Website

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